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Wednesday, October 22, 2014

April was the first time I ever participated in a "Flip the Pattern" with Frances Susanne and it was so fun! You can see my flip here.
It truly inspired me to do more and while I've had every intention to
do the next and the next and the next, we decided to move from Toronto
to Florida and my life is currently chaotic. I have checked in monthly,
voted for my favourites and longed for a time I could rejoin. And,
while my life is still spread across two countries, my parents home, my
in-laws home and a storage unit, Halloween always gets me sewing for my
girls and getting creative. In fact, Halloween 2011 was my very first
"Flip the pattern" ever, even though that wasn't a thing then. I used a
Heidi and Finn pattern I loved and altered it ever so slightly to make a
Shamu costume for our whale loving daughter.

This
year I was worried she would want to be Elsa and look like every other
child trick or treating in 2014. She actually settle on Rapunzel which I
thought could be fun, naturally baby sis would be pascal. She then
changed her mind to Aurora.... this actually shocked me because Aurora
is the one princess I know very little about. I wasn't sure where she
was coming from since there hasn't been much hype about her until...the
re-release of Sleeping Beauty on DVD October 7. My girl is ahead of the
curve. So while everyone else will be Aurora in 2015, my girl will be
leading the charge on the next big princess.

Once we
decided on Aurora I set to work trying to figure out who Baby sister
would be and decided on Merryweather. Nothing could be more perfect!

And
here's how we ended up with our flip. I had already purchased the
Brownie Goose Hattie pattern and was dying to give it a try. I
absolutely love the vintage vibe it has. When I saw it was this months
flip, it was the right motivation to print that Hattie and get one
made. So Merryweather's costume was inspired by the Hattie. The
gathered sleeve and the stand up collar are the perfect Disney costume
details.

I didn't make huge changes...it didn't
need huge changes. It fit so perfectly for what I had in mind. I
started with blue broadcloth, this was not a recommended material and I
would not recommend using it for this pattern, but it was cheap and this
was a costume not an everyday dress. The fabric was thin so it was
difficult to get the structured look that I love about this pattern, but
again for a costume it did the trick. I used tulle instead of fabric
for the collar and doubled the width of the neck ruffle to 4 inches to
make it larger and more Disney like. I also used the selvage length and
didn't cut it down nearly what I says in the pattern as tulle is much
finer than other fabrics and I wanted to give it a fuller look. I added
tulle to the bottom of the skirt and then put a tutu our
daughter already had under the dress to make the skirt appear fuller
(although our almost 18 month old has a fairly similar shape to Merry
Weather to begin with!). I added sequence to the neckline and a
sequence and ruffle embellishment to the bottom to give it the fairy
detail and make it special for Halloween.

I added a cape by purchasing I meter of broadcloth. It was
a super simple construction, again relying on embellishments to give
the fairy costume look. Here is what I did. 1. Folded the fabric in half 2. Then I traced two
semi-circles at the top sides then trimmed the outer edges to leave the semi circles at the top. 3. I stitched it up leaving a small opening to turn it inside out. 4. I then folded the top section (the semi-circles and across to create a collar). I then used a basting stitch to gather it and create a flowy look. 5. Cover the basting stitch with a ribbon or an extra piece of fabric. See the terrible diagram below (I did feel like pictures helped explain my process).

The final touch....her hat. I purchased a mini-brown cardboard witch hat from target and covered it with remaining fabric from the dress.